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Complex reflection group

In mathematics, a complex reflection group is a finite group acting on a finite-dimensional complex vector space that is generated by complex reflections: non-trivial elements that fix a complex hyperplane pointwise.

Complex reflection groups arise in the study of the invariant theory of polynomial rings. In the mid-20th century, they were completely classified in work of Shephard and Todd. Special cases include the symmetric group of permutations, the dihedral groups, and more generally all finite real reflection groups (the Coxeter groups or Weyl groups, including the symmetry groups of regular polyhedra).

Definition edit

A (complex) reflection r (sometimes also called pseudo reflection or unitary reflection) of a finite-dimensional complex vector space V is an element   of finite order that fixes a complex hyperplane pointwise, that is, the fixed-space   has codimension 1.

A (finite) complex reflection group   is a finite subgroup of   that is generated by reflections.

Properties edit

Any real reflection group becomes a complex reflection group if we extend the scalars from R to C. In particular, all finite Coxeter groups or Weyl groups give examples of complex reflection groups.

A complex reflection group W is irreducible if the only W-invariant proper subspace of the corresponding vector space is the origin. In this case, the dimension of the vector space is called the rank of W.

The Coxeter number   of an irreducible complex reflection group W of rank   is defined as   where   denotes the set of reflections and   denotes the set of reflecting hyperplanes. In the case of real reflection groups, this definition reduces to the usual definition of the Coxeter number for finite Coxeter systems.

Classification edit

Any complex reflection group is a product of irreducible complex reflection groups, acting on the sum of the corresponding vector spaces.[1] So it is sufficient to classify the irreducible complex reflection groups.

The irreducible complex reflection groups were classified by G. C. Shephard and J. A. Todd (1954). They proved that every irreducible belonged to an infinite family G(m, p, n) depending on 3 positive integer parameters (with p dividing m) or was one of 34 exceptional cases, which they numbered from 4 to 37.[2] The group G(m, 1, n) is the generalized symmetric group; equivalently, it is the wreath product of the symmetric group Sym(n) by a cyclic group of order m. As a matrix group, its elements may be realized as monomial matrices whose nonzero elements are mth roots of unity.

The group G(m, p, n) is an index-p subgroup of G(m, 1, n). G(m, p, n) is of order mnn!/p. As matrices, it may be realized as the subset in which the product of the nonzero entries is an (m/p)th root of unity (rather than just an mth root). Algebraically, G(m, p, n) is a semidirect product of an abelian group of order mn/p by the symmetric group Sym(n); the elements of the abelian group are of the form (θa1, θa2, ..., θan), where θ is a primitive mth root of unity and Σai ≡ 0 mod p, and Sym(n) acts by permutations of the coordinates.[3]

The group G(m,p,n) acts irreducibly on Cn except in the cases m = 1, n > 1 (the symmetric group) and G(2, 2, 2) (the Klein four-group). In these cases, Cn splits as a sum of irreducible representations of dimensions 1 and n − 1.

Special cases of G(m, p, n) edit

Coxeter groups edit

When m = 2, the representation described in the previous section consists of matrices with real entries, and hence in these cases G(m,p,n) is a finite Coxeter group. In particular:[4]

  • G(1, 1, n) has type An−1 = [3,3,...,3,3] =     ...    ; the symmetric group of order n!
  • G(2, 1, n) has type Bn = [3,3,...,3,4] =     ...    ; the hyperoctahedral group of order 2nn!
  • G(2, 2, n) has type Dn = [3,3,...,31,1] =     ...    , order 2nn!/2.

In addition, when m = p and n = 2, the group G(p, p, 2) is the dihedral group of order 2p; as a Coxeter group, type I2(p) = [p] =    (and the Weyl group G2 when p = 6).

Other special cases and coincidences edit

The only cases when two groups G(m, p, n) are isomorphic as complex reflection groups[clarification needed] are that G(ma, pa, 1) is isomorphic to G(mb, pb, 1) for any positive integers a, b (and both are isomorphic to the cyclic group of order m/p). However, there are other cases when two such groups are isomorphic as abstract groups.

The groups G(3, 3, 2) and G(1, 1, 3) are isomorphic to the symmetric group Sym(3). The groups G(2, 2, 3) and G(1, 1, 4) are isomorphic to the symmetric group Sym(4). Both G(2, 1, 2) and G(4, 4, 2) are isomorphic to the dihedral group of order 8. And the groups G(2p, p, 1) are cyclic of order 2, as is G(1, 1, 2).

List of irreducible complex reflection groups edit

There are a few duplicates in the first 3 lines of this list; see the previous section for details.

  • ST is the Shephard–Todd number of the reflection group.
  • Rank is the dimension of the complex vector space the group acts on.
  • Structure describes the structure of the group. The symbol * stands for a central product of two groups. For rank 2, the quotient by the (cyclic) center is the group of rotations of a tetrahedron, octahedron, or icosahedron (T = Alt(4), O = Sym(4), I = Alt(5), of orders 12, 24, 60), as stated in the table. For the notation 21+4, see extra special group.
  • Order is the number of elements of the group.
  • Reflections describes the number of reflections: 26412 means that there are 6 reflections of order 2 and 12 of order 4.
  • Degrees gives the degrees of the fundamental invariants of the ring of polynomial invariants. For example, the invariants of group number 4 form a polynomial ring with 2 generators of degrees 4 and 6.
ST Rank Structure and names Coxeter names Order Reflections Degrees Codegrees
1 n−1 Symmetric group G(1,1,n) = Sym(n) n! 2n(n − 1)/2 2, 3, ...,n 0,1,...,n − 2
2 n G(m,p,n) m > 1, n > 1, p|m (G(2,2,2) is reducible) mnn!/p 2mn(n−1)/2,dnφ(d) (d|m/pd > 1) m,2m,..,(n − 1)m; mn/p 0,m,..., (n − 1)m if p < m; 0,m,...,(n − 2)m, (n − 1)m − n if p = m
2 2 G(p,1,2) p > 1, p[4]2 or     2p2 2p,d2φ(d) (d|pd > 1) p; 2p 0,p
2 2 Dihedral group G(p,p,2) p > 2 [p] or     2p 2p 2,p 0,p-2
3 1 Cyclic group G(p,1,1) = Zp p[] or   p dφ(d) (d|pd > 1) p 0
4 2 W(L2), Z2.T 3[3]3 or    , ⟨2,3,3⟩ 24 38 4,6 0,2
5 2 Z6.T 3[4]3 or     72 316 6,12 0,6
6 2 Z4.T 3[6]2 or     48 2638 4,12 0,8
7 2 Z12.T ‹3,3,3›2 or ⟨2,3,3⟩6 144 26316 12,12 0,12
8 2 Z4.O 4[3]4 or     96 26412 8,12 0,4
9 2 Z8.O 4[6]2 or     or ⟨2,3,4⟩4 192 218412 8,24 0,16
10 2 Z12.O 4[4]3 or     288 26316412 12,24 0,12
11 2 Z24.O ⟨2,3,4⟩12 576 218316412 24,24 0,24
12 2 Z2.O= GL2(F3) ⟨2,3,4⟩ 48 212 6,8 0,10
13 2 Z4.O ⟨2,3,4⟩2 96 218 8,12 0,16
14 2 Z6.O 3[8]2 or     144 212316 6,24 0,18
15 2 Z12.O ⟨2,3,4⟩6 288 218316 12,24 0,24
16 2 Z10.I, ⟨2,3,5⟩×Z5 5[3]5 or     600 548 20,30 0,10
17 2 Z20.I 5[6]2 or     1200 230548 20,60 0,40
18 2 Z30.I 5[4]3 or     1800 340548 30,60 0,30
19 2 Z60.I ⟨2,3,5⟩30 3600 230340548 60,60 0,60
20 2 Z6.I 3[5]3 or     360 340 12,30 0,18
21 2 Z12.I 3[10]2 or     720 230340 12,60 0,48
22 2 Z4.I ⟨2,3,5⟩2 240 230 12,20 0,28
23 3 W(H3) = Z2 × PSL2(5) [5,3],       120 215 2,6,10 0,4,8
24 3 W(J3(4)) = Z2 × PSL2(7), Klein [1 1 14]4,      336 221 4,6,14 0,8,10
25 3 W(L3) = W(P3) = 31+2.SL2(3) Hessian 3[3]3[3]3,       648 324 6,9,12 0,3,6
26 3 W(M3) =Z2 ×31+2.SL2(3) Hessian 2[4]3[3]3,       1296 29 324 6,12,18 0,6,12
27 3 W(J3(5)) = Z2 ×(Z3.Alt(6)), Valentiner [1 1 15]4,     
[1 1 14]5,     
2160 245 6,12,30 0,18,24
28 4 W(F4) = (SL2(3)* SL2(3)).(Z2 × Z2) [3,4,3],         1152 212+12 2,6,8,12 0,4,6,10
29 4 W(N4) = (Z4*21 + 4).Sym(5) [1 1 2]4,       7680 240 4,8,12,20 0,8,12,16
30 4 W(H4) = (SL2(5)*SL2(5)).Z2 [5,3,3],         14400 260 2,12,20,30 0,10,18,28
31 4 W(EN4) = W(O4) = (Z4*21 + 4).Sp4(2) 46080 260 8,12,20,24 0,12,16,28
32 4 W(L4) = Z3 × Sp4(3) 3[3]3[3]3[3]3,         155520 380 12,18,24,30 0,6,12,18
33 5 W(K5) = Z2 ×Ω5(3) = Z2 × PSp4(3)= Z2 × PSU4(2) [1 2 2]3,       51840 245 4,6,10,12,18 0,6,8,12,14
34 6 W(K6)= Z3
6
(3).Z2, Mitchell's group
[1 2 3]3,         39191040 2126 6,12,18,24,30,42 0,12,18,24,30,36
35 6 W(E6) = SO5(3) = O
6
(2) = PSp4(3).Z2 = PSU4(2).Z2
[32,2,1],         51840 236 2,5,6,8,9,12 0,3,4,6,7,10
36 7 W(E7) = Z2 ×Sp6(2) [33,2,1],             2903040 263 2,6,8,10,12,14,18 0,4,6,8,10,12,16
37 8 W(E8)= Z2.O+
8
(2)
[34,2,1],               696729600 2120 2,8,12,14,18,20,24,30 0,6,10,12,16,18,22,28

For more information, including diagrams, presentations, and codegrees of complex reflection groups, see the tables in (Michel Broué, Gunter Malle & Raphaël Rouquier 1998).

Degrees edit

Shephard and Todd proved that a finite group acting on a complex vector space is a complex reflection group if and only if its ring of invariants is a polynomial ring (Chevalley–Shephard–Todd theorem). For   being the rank of the reflection group, the degrees   of the generators of the ring of invariants are called degrees of W and are listed in the column above headed "degrees". They also showed that many other invariants of the group are determined by the degrees as follows:

  • The center of an irreducible reflection group is cyclic of order equal to the greatest common divisor of the degrees.
  • The order of a complex reflection group is the product of its degrees.
  • The number of reflections is the sum of the degrees minus the rank.
  • An irreducible complex reflection group comes from a real reflection group if and only if it has an invariant of degree 2.
  • The degrees di satisfy the formula  

Codegrees edit

For   being the rank of the reflection group, the codegrees   of W can be defined by  

  • For a real reflection group, the codegrees are the degrees minus 2.
  • The number of reflection hyperplanes is the sum of the codegrees plus the rank.

Well-generated complex reflection groups edit

By definition, every complex reflection group is generated by its reflections. The set of reflections is not a minimal generating set, however, and every irreducible complex reflection groups of rank n has a minimal generating set consisting of either n or n + 1 reflections. In the former case, the group is said to be well-generated.

The property of being well-generated is equivalent to the condition   for all  . Thus, for example, one can read off from the classification that the group G(m, p, n) is well-generated if and only if p = 1 or m.

For irreducible well-generated complex reflection groups, the Coxeter number h defined above equals the largest degree,  . A reducible complex reflection group is said to be well-generated if it is a product of irreducible well-generated complex reflection groups. Every finite real reflection group is well-generated.

Shephard groups edit

The well-generated complex reflection groups include a subset called the Shephard groups. These groups are the symmetry groups of regular complex polytopes. In particular, they include the symmetry groups of regular real polyhedra. The Shephard groups may be characterized as the complex reflection groups that admit a "Coxeter-like" presentation with a linear diagram. That is, a Shephard group has associated positive integers p1, ..., pn and q1, ..., qn − 1 such that there is a generating set s1, ..., sn satisfying the relations

  for i = 1, ..., n,
  if  ,

and

  where the products on both sides have qi terms, for i = 1, ..., n − 1.

This information is sometimes collected in the Coxeter-type symbol p1[q1]p2[q2] ... [qn − 1]pn, as seen in the table above.

Among groups in the infinite family G(m, p, n), the Shephard groups are those in which p = 1. There are also 18 exceptional Shephard groups, of which three are real.[5][6]

Cartan matrices edit

An extended Cartan matrix defines the unitary group. Shephard groups of rank n group have n generators. Ordinary Cartan matrices have diagonal elements 2, while unitary reflections do not have this restriction.[7] For example, the rank 1 group of order p (with symbols p[],  ) is defined by the 1 × 1 matrix  .

Given:  .

Rank 1
Group Cartan Group Cartan
2[]     3[]    
4[]     5[]    
Rank 2
Group Cartan Group Cartan
G4 3[3]3       G5 3[4]3      
G6 2[6]3       G8 4[3]4      
G9 2[6]4       G10 3[4]4      
G14 3[8]2       G16 5[3]5      
G17 2[6]5       G18 3[4]5      
G20 3[5]3       G21 2[10]3      
Rank 3
Group Cartan Group Cartan
G22 <5,3,2>2   G23 [5,3]        
G24 [1 1 14]4        G25 3[3]3[3]3        
G26 3[3]3[4]2         G27 [1 1 15]4       
Rank 4
Group Cartan Group Cartan
G28 [3,4,3]           G29 [1 1 2]4        
G30 [5,3,3]           G32 3[3]3[3]3          
Rank 5
Group Cartan Group Cartan
G31 O4   G33 [1 2 2]3        

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lehrer and Taylor, Theorem 1.27.
  2. ^ Lehrer and Taylor, p. 271.
  3. ^ Lehrer and Taylor, Section 2.2.
  4. ^ Lehrer and Taylor, Example 2.11.
  5. ^ Peter Orlik, Victor Reiner, Anne V. Shepler. The sign representation for Shephard groups. Mathematische Annalen. March 2002, Volume 322, Issue 3, pp 477–492. DOI:10.1007/s002080200001 [1]
  6. ^ Coxeter, H. S. M.; Regular Complex Polytopes, Cambridge University Press, 1974.
  7. ^ Unitary Reflection Groups, pp.91-93
  • Broué, Michel; Malle, Gunter; Rouquier, Raphaël (1995), "On complex reflection groups and their associated braid groups" (PDF), Representations of groups (Banff, AB, 1994), CMS Conf. Proc., vol. 16, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, pp. 1–13, MR 1357192
  • Broué, Michel; Malle, Gunter; Rouquier, Raphaël (1998), "Complex reflection groups, braid groups, Hecke algebras", Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik, 1998 (500): 127–190, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.128.2907, doi:10.1515/crll.1998.064, ISSN 0075-4102, MR 1637497
  • Deligne, Pierre (1972), "Les immeubles des groupes de tresses généralisés", Inventiones Mathematicae, 17 (4): 273–302, Bibcode:1972InMat..17..273D, doi:10.1007/BF01406236, ISSN 0020-9910, MR 0422673, S2CID 123680847
  • Hiller, Howard Geometry of Coxeter groups. Research Notes in Mathematics, 54. Pitman (Advanced Publishing Program), Boston, Mass.-London, 1982. iv+213 pp. ISBN 0-273-08517-4*
  • Lehrer, Gustav I.; Taylor, Donald E. (2009), Unitary reflection groups, Australian Mathematical Society Lecture Series, vol. 20, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-74989-3, MR 2542964
  • Shephard, G. C.; Todd, J. A. (1954), "Finite unitary reflection groups", Canadian Journal of Mathematics, Canadian Mathematical Society, 6: 274–304, doi:10.4153/CJM-1954-028-3, ISSN 0008-414X, MR 0059914, S2CID 3342221
  • Coxeter, Finite Groups Generated by Unitary Reflections, 1966, 4. The Graphical Notation, Table of n-dimensional groups generated by n Unitary Reflections. pp. 422–423

External links edit

  • MAGMA Computational Algebra System page

complex, reflection, group, mathematics, complex, reflection, group, finite, group, acting, finite, dimensional, complex, vector, space, that, generated, complex, reflections, trivial, elements, that, complex, hyperplane, pointwise, arise, study, invariant, th. In mathematics a complex reflection group is a finite group acting on a finite dimensional complex vector space that is generated by complex reflections non trivial elements that fix a complex hyperplane pointwise Complex reflection groups arise in the study of the invariant theory of polynomial rings In the mid 20th century they were completely classified in work of Shephard and Todd Special cases include the symmetric group of permutations the dihedral groups and more generally all finite real reflection groups the Coxeter groups or Weyl groups including the symmetry groups of regular polyhedra Contents 1 Definition 2 Properties 3 Classification 3 1 Special cases of G m p n 3 1 1 Coxeter groups 3 1 2 Other special cases and coincidences 4 List of irreducible complex reflection groups 5 Degrees 6 Codegrees 7 Well generated complex reflection groups 8 Shephard groups 9 Cartan matrices 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksDefinition editA complex reflection r sometimes also called pseudo reflection or unitary reflection of a finite dimensional complex vector space V is an element r G L V displaystyle r in GL V nbsp of finite order that fixes a complex hyperplane pointwise that is the fixed space Fix r ker r Id V displaystyle operatorname Fix r operatorname ker r operatorname Id V nbsp has codimension 1 A finite complex reflection group W G L V displaystyle W subseteq GL V nbsp is a finite subgroup of G L V displaystyle GL V nbsp that is generated by reflections Properties editAny real reflection group becomes a complex reflection group if we extend the scalars from R to C In particular all finite Coxeter groups or Weyl groups give examples of complex reflection groups A complex reflection group W is irreducible if the only W invariant proper subspace of the corresponding vector space is the origin In this case the dimension of the vector space is called the rank of W The Coxeter number h displaystyle h nbsp of an irreducible complex reflection group W of rank n displaystyle n nbsp is defined as h R A n displaystyle h frac mathcal R mathcal A n nbsp where R displaystyle mathcal R nbsp denotes the set of reflections and A displaystyle mathcal A nbsp denotes the set of reflecting hyperplanes In the case of real reflection groups this definition reduces to the usual definition of the Coxeter number for finite Coxeter systems Classification editAny complex reflection group is a product of irreducible complex reflection groups acting on the sum of the corresponding vector spaces 1 So it is sufficient to classify the irreducible complex reflection groups The irreducible complex reflection groups were classified by G C Shephard and J A Todd 1954 They proved that every irreducible belonged to an infinite family G m p n depending on 3 positive integer parameters with p dividing m or was one of 34 exceptional cases which they numbered from 4 to 37 2 The group G m 1 n is the generalized symmetric group equivalently it is the wreath product of the symmetric group Sym n by a cyclic group of order m As a matrix group its elements may be realized as monomial matrices whose nonzero elements are mth roots of unity The group G m p n is an index p subgroup of G m 1 n G m p n is of order mnn p As matrices it may be realized as the subset in which the product of the nonzero entries is an m p th root of unity rather than just an mth root Algebraically G m p n is a semidirect product of an abelian group of order mn p by the symmetric group Sym n the elements of the abelian group are of the form 8a1 8a2 8an where 8 is a primitive mth root of unity and Sai 0 mod p and Sym n acts by permutations of the coordinates 3 The group G m p n acts irreducibly on Cn except in the cases m 1 n gt 1 the symmetric group and G 2 2 2 the Klein four group In these cases Cn splits as a sum of irreducible representations of dimensions 1 and n 1 Special cases of G m p n edit Coxeter groups edit When m 2 the representation described in the previous section consists of matrices with real entries and hence in these cases G m p n is a finite Coxeter group In particular 4 G 1 1 n has type An 1 3 3 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp the symmetric group of order n G 2 1 n has type Bn 3 3 3 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp the hyperoctahedral group of order 2nn G 2 2 n has type Dn 3 3 31 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp order 2nn 2 In addition when m p and n 2 the group G p p 2 is the dihedral group of order 2p as a Coxeter group type I2 p p nbsp nbsp and the Weyl group G2 when p 6 Other special cases and coincidences edit The only cases when two groups G m p n are isomorphic as complex reflection groups clarification needed are that G ma pa 1 is isomorphic to G mb pb 1 for any positive integers a b and both are isomorphic to the cyclic group of order m p However there are other cases when two such groups are isomorphic as abstract groups The groups G 3 3 2 and G 1 1 3 are isomorphic to the symmetric group Sym 3 The groups G 2 2 3 and G 1 1 4 are isomorphic to the symmetric group Sym 4 Both G 2 1 2 and G 4 4 2 are isomorphic to the dihedral group of order 8 And the groups G 2p p 1 are cyclic of order 2 as is G 1 1 2 List of irreducible complex reflection groups editThere are a few duplicates in the first 3 lines of this list see the previous section for details ST is the Shephard Todd number of the reflection group Rank is the dimension of the complex vector space the group acts on Structure describes the structure of the group The symbol stands for a central product of two groups For rank 2 the quotient by the cyclic center is the group of rotations of a tetrahedron octahedron or icosahedron T Alt 4 O Sym 4 I Alt 5 of orders 12 24 60 as stated in the table For the notation 21 4 see extra special group Order is the number of elements of the group Reflections describes the number of reflections 26412 means that there are 6 reflections of order 2 and 12 of order 4 Degrees gives the degrees of the fundamental invariants of the ring of polynomial invariants For example the invariants of group number 4 form a polynomial ring with 2 generators of degrees 4 and 6 ST Rank Structure and names Coxeter names Order Reflections Degrees Codegrees1 n 1 Symmetric group G 1 1 n Sym n n 2n n 1 2 2 3 n 0 1 n 22 n G m p n m gt 1 n gt 1 p m G 2 2 2 is reducible mnn p 2mn n 1 2 dnf d d m p d gt 1 m 2m n 1 m mn p 0 m n 1 m if p lt m 0 m n 2 m n 1 m n if p m2 2 G p 1 2 p gt 1 p 4 2 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 2p2 2p d2f d d p d gt 1 p 2p 0 p2 2 Dihedral group G p p 2 p gt 2 p or nbsp nbsp nbsp 2p 2p 2 p 0 p 23 1 Cyclic group G p 1 1 Zp p or nbsp p df d d p d gt 1 p 04 2 W L2 Z2 T 3 3 3 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 3 3 24 38 4 6 0 25 2 Z6 T 3 4 3 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 72 316 6 12 0 66 2 Z4 T 3 6 2 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 48 2638 4 12 0 87 2 Z12 T 3 3 3 2 or 2 3 3 6 144 26316 12 12 0 128 2 Z4 O 4 3 4 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 96 26412 8 12 0 49 2 Z8 O 4 6 2 or nbsp nbsp nbsp or 2 3 4 4 192 218412 8 24 0 1610 2 Z12 O 4 4 3 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 288 26316412 12 24 0 1211 2 Z24 O 2 3 4 12 576 218316412 24 24 0 2412 2 Z2 O GL2 F3 2 3 4 48 212 6 8 0 1013 2 Z4 O 2 3 4 2 96 218 8 12 0 1614 2 Z6 O 3 8 2 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 144 212316 6 24 0 1815 2 Z12 O 2 3 4 6 288 218316 12 24 0 2416 2 Z10 I 2 3 5 Z5 5 3 5 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 600 548 20 30 0 1017 2 Z20 I 5 6 2 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 1200 230548 20 60 0 4018 2 Z30 I 5 4 3 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 1800 340548 30 60 0 3019 2 Z60 I 2 3 5 30 3600 230340548 60 60 0 6020 2 Z6 I 3 5 3 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 360 340 12 30 0 1821 2 Z12 I 3 10 2 or nbsp nbsp nbsp 720 230340 12 60 0 4822 2 Z4 I 2 3 5 2 240 230 12 20 0 2823 3 W H3 Z2 PSL2 5 5 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 120 215 2 6 10 0 4 824 3 W J3 4 Z2 PSL2 7 Klein 1 1 14 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 336 221 4 6 14 0 8 1025 3 W L3 W P3 31 2 SL2 3 Hessian 3 3 3 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 648 324 6 9 12 0 3 626 3 W M3 Z2 31 2 SL2 3 Hessian 2 4 3 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1296 29 324 6 12 18 0 6 1227 3 W J3 5 Z2 Z3 Alt 6 Valentiner 1 1 15 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 1 14 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2160 245 6 12 30 0 18 2428 4 W F4 SL2 3 SL2 3 Z2 Z2 3 4 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1152 212 12 2 6 8 12 0 4 6 1029 4 W N4 Z4 21 4 Sym 5 1 1 2 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 7680 240 4 8 12 20 0 8 12 1630 4 W H4 SL2 5 SL2 5 Z2 5 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 14400 260 2 12 20 30 0 10 18 2831 4 W EN4 W O4 Z4 21 4 Sp4 2 46080 260 8 12 20 24 0 12 16 2832 4 W L4 Z3 Sp4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 155520 380 12 18 24 30 0 6 12 1833 5 W K5 Z2 W5 3 Z2 PSp4 3 Z2 PSU4 2 1 2 2 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 51840 245 4 6 10 12 18 0 6 8 12 1434 6 W K6 Z3 W 6 3 Z2 Mitchell s group 1 2 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 39191040 2126 6 12 18 24 30 42 0 12 18 24 30 3635 6 W E6 SO5 3 O 6 2 PSp4 3 Z2 PSU4 2 Z2 32 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 51840 236 2 5 6 8 9 12 0 3 4 6 7 1036 7 W E7 Z2 Sp6 2 33 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2903040 263 2 6 8 10 12 14 18 0 4 6 8 10 12 1637 8 W E8 Z2 O 8 2 34 2 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 696729600 2120 2 8 12 14 18 20 24 30 0 6 10 12 16 18 22 28For more information including diagrams presentations and codegrees of complex reflection groups see the tables in Michel Broue Gunter Malle amp Raphael Rouquier 1998 Degrees editShephard and Todd proved that a finite group acting on a complex vector space is a complex reflection group if and only if its ring of invariants is a polynomial ring Chevalley Shephard Todd theorem For ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp being the rank of the reflection group the degrees d 1 d 2 d ℓ displaystyle d 1 leq d 2 leq ldots leq d ell nbsp of the generators of the ring of invariants are called degrees of W and are listed in the column above headed degrees They also showed that many other invariants of the group are determined by the degrees as follows The center of an irreducible reflection group is cyclic of order equal to the greatest common divisor of the degrees The order of a complex reflection group is the product of its degrees The number of reflections is the sum of the degrees minus the rank An irreducible complex reflection group comes from a real reflection group if and only if it has an invariant of degree 2 The degrees di satisfy the formula i 1 ℓ q d i 1 w W q dim V w displaystyle prod i 1 ell q d i 1 sum w in W q dim V w nbsp Codegrees editFor ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp being the rank of the reflection group the codegrees d 1 d 2 d ℓ displaystyle d 1 geq d 2 geq ldots geq d ell nbsp of W can be defined by i 1 ℓ q d i 1 w W det w q dim V w displaystyle prod i 1 ell q d i 1 sum w in W det w q dim V w nbsp For a real reflection group the codegrees are the degrees minus 2 The number of reflection hyperplanes is the sum of the codegrees plus the rank Well generated complex reflection groups editBy definition every complex reflection group is generated by its reflections The set of reflections is not a minimal generating set however and every irreducible complex reflection groups of rank n has a minimal generating set consisting of either n or n 1 reflections In the former case the group is said to be well generated The property of being well generated is equivalent to the condition d i d i d ℓ displaystyle d i d i d ell nbsp for all 1 i ℓ displaystyle 1 leq i leq ell nbsp Thus for example one can read off from the classification that the group G m p n is well generated if and only if p 1 or m For irreducible well generated complex reflection groups the Coxeter number h defined above equals the largest degree h d ℓ displaystyle h d ell nbsp A reducible complex reflection group is said to be well generated if it is a product of irreducible well generated complex reflection groups Every finite real reflection group is well generated Shephard groups editThe well generated complex reflection groups include a subset called the Shephard groups These groups are the symmetry groups of regular complex polytopes In particular they include the symmetry groups of regular real polyhedra The Shephard groups may be characterized as the complex reflection groups that admit a Coxeter like presentation with a linear diagram That is a Shephard group has associated positive integers p1 pn and q1 qn 1 such that there is a generating set s1 sn satisfying the relations s i p i 1 displaystyle s i p i 1 nbsp for i 1 n s i s j s j s i displaystyle s i s j s j s i nbsp if i j gt 1 displaystyle i j gt 1 nbsp and s i s i 1 s i s i 1 s i 1 s i s i 1 s i displaystyle s i s i 1 s i s i 1 cdots s i 1 s i s i 1 s i cdots nbsp where the products on both sides have qi terms for i 1 n 1 This information is sometimes collected in the Coxeter type symbol p1 q1 p2 q2 qn 1 pn as seen in the table above Among groups in the infinite family G m p n the Shephard groups are those in which p 1 There are also 18 exceptional Shephard groups of which three are real 5 6 Cartan matrices editAn extended Cartan matrix defines the unitary group Shephard groups of rank n group have n generators Ordinary Cartan matrices have diagonal elements 2 while unitary reflections do not have this restriction 7 For example the rank 1 group of order p with symbols p nbsp is defined by the 1 1 matrix 1 e 2 p i p displaystyle left 1 e 2 pi i p right nbsp Given z p e 2 p i p w z 3 e 2 p i 3 1 2 1 i 3 z 4 e 2 p i 4 i z 5 e 2 p i 5 1 4 5 1 i 2 5 5 t 1 5 2 l 1 i 7 2 w 1 i 3 2 displaystyle zeta p e 2 pi i p omega zeta 3 e 2 pi i 3 tfrac 1 2 1 i sqrt 3 zeta 4 e 2 pi i 4 i zeta 5 e 2 pi i 5 tfrac 1 4 left sqrt 5 1 right i sqrt 2 5 sqrt 5 tau tfrac 1 sqrt 5 2 lambda tfrac 1 i sqrt 7 2 omega tfrac 1 i sqrt 3 2 nbsp Rank 1 Group Cartan Group Cartan2 nbsp 2 displaystyle left begin matrix 2 end matrix right nbsp 3 nbsp 1 w displaystyle left begin matrix 1 omega end matrix right nbsp 4 nbsp 1 i displaystyle left begin matrix 1 i end matrix right nbsp 5 nbsp 1 z 5 displaystyle left begin matrix 1 zeta 5 end matrix right nbsp Rank 2 Group Cartan Group CartanG4 3 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w 1 w 1 w displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp 1 omega amp 1 omega end smallmatrix right nbsp G5 3 4 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w 1 2 w 1 w displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp 1 2 omega amp 1 omega end smallmatrix right nbsp G6 2 6 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 1 w i w 2 1 w displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 1 omega i omega 2 amp 1 omega end smallmatrix right nbsp G8 4 3 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 i 1 i 1 i displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 i amp 1 i amp 1 i end smallmatrix right nbsp G9 2 6 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 1 2 z 8 1 i displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 1 sqrt 2 zeta 8 amp 1 i end smallmatrix right nbsp G10 3 4 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w 1 i w 1 i displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp 1 i omega amp 1 i end smallmatrix right nbsp G14 3 8 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w 1 1 w w 2 2 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp 1 1 omega omega 2 sqrt 2 amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G16 5 3 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 z 5 1 z 5 1 z 5 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 zeta 5 amp 1 zeta 5 amp 1 zeta 5 end smallmatrix right nbsp G17 2 6 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 1 z 5 i z 3 1 z 5 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 1 zeta 5 i zeta 3 amp 1 zeta 5 end smallmatrix right nbsp G18 3 4 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w 1 w z 5 1 z 5 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp 1 omega zeta 5 amp 1 zeta 5 end smallmatrix right nbsp G20 3 5 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w 1 w t 2 1 w displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp 1 omega tau 2 amp 1 omega end smallmatrix right nbsp G21 2 10 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 1 w i w 2 t 1 w displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 1 omega i omega 2 tau amp 1 omega end smallmatrix right nbsp Rank 3 Group Cartan Group CartanG22 lt 5 3 2 gt 2 2 t i 1 i 1 t i 1 2 i i 1 i 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp tau i 1 amp i 1 tau i 1 amp 2 amp i i 1 amp i amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G23 5 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 t 0 t 2 1 0 1 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp tau amp 0 tau amp 2 amp 1 0 amp 1 amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G24 1 1 14 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 l 1 2 1 1 l 1 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 amp lambda 1 amp 2 amp 1 1 lambda amp 1 amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G25 3 3 3 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w w 2 0 w 2 1 w w 2 0 w 2 1 w displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp omega 2 amp 0 omega 2 amp 1 omega amp omega 2 0 amp omega 2 amp 1 omega end smallmatrix right nbsp G26 3 3 3 4 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w w 2 0 w 2 1 w 1 0 1 w 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp omega 2 amp 0 omega 2 amp 1 omega amp 1 0 amp 1 omega amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G27 1 1 15 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 t w t 2 w 2 w 2 w 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp tau amp omega tau amp 2 amp omega 2 omega 2 amp omega amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp Rank 4 Group Cartan Group CartanG28 3 4 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 2 amp 2 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 2 amp 1 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G29 1 1 2 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 i 1 0 1 2 i 0 i 1 i 2 1 0 0 1 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 amp i 1 amp 0 1 amp 2 amp i amp 0 i 1 amp i amp 2 amp 1 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G30 5 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 t 0 0 t 2 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp tau amp 0 amp 0 tau amp 2 amp 1 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 2 amp 1 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G32 3 3 3 3 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 w w 2 0 0 w 2 1 w w 2 0 0 w 2 1 w w 2 0 0 w 2 1 w displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 omega amp omega 2 amp 0 amp 0 omega 2 amp 1 omega amp omega 2 amp 0 0 amp omega 2 amp 1 omega amp omega 2 0 amp 0 amp omega 2 amp 1 omega end smallmatrix right nbsp Rank 5 Group Cartan Group CartanG31 O4 2 1 i 1 0 i 1 1 2 i 0 0 i 1 i 2 1 i 1 0 0 1 2 1 i 1 0 i 1 1 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 amp i 1 amp 0 amp i 1 1 amp 2 amp i amp 0 amp 0 i 1 amp i amp 2 amp 1 amp i 1 0 amp 0 amp 1 amp 2 amp 1 i 1 amp 0 amp i 1 amp 1 amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp G33 1 2 2 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 1 2 w 0 0 1 w 2 2 w 2 0 0 0 w 2 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 2 amp 1 amp 0 amp 0 amp 0 1 amp 2 amp 1 amp 1 amp 0 0 amp 1 amp 2 amp omega amp 0 0 amp 1 amp omega 2 amp 2 amp omega 2 0 amp 0 amp 0 amp omega amp 2 end smallmatrix right nbsp See also editParabolic subgroup of a reflection groupReferences edit Lehrer and Taylor Theorem 1 27 Lehrer and Taylor p 271 Lehrer and Taylor Section 2 2 Lehrer and Taylor Example 2 11 Peter Orlik Victor Reiner Anne V Shepler The sign representation for Shephard groups Mathematische Annalen March 2002 Volume 322 Issue 3 pp 477 492 DOI 10 1007 s002080200001 1 Coxeter H S M Regular Complex Polytopes Cambridge University Press 1974 Unitary Reflection Groups pp 91 93 Broue Michel Malle Gunter Rouquier Raphael 1995 On complex reflection groups and their associated braid groups PDF Representations of groups Banff AB 1994 CMS Conf Proc vol 16 Providence R I American Mathematical Society pp 1 13 MR 1357192 Broue Michel Malle Gunter Rouquier Raphael 1998 Complex reflection groups braid groups Hecke algebras Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1998 500 127 190 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 128 2907 doi 10 1515 crll 1998 064 ISSN 0075 4102 MR 1637497 Deligne Pierre 1972 Les immeubles des groupes de tresses generalises Inventiones Mathematicae 17 4 273 302 Bibcode 1972InMat 17 273D doi 10 1007 BF01406236 ISSN 0020 9910 MR 0422673 S2CID 123680847 Hiller Howard Geometry of Coxeter groups Research Notes in Mathematics 54 Pitman Advanced Publishing Program Boston Mass London 1982 iv 213 pp ISBN 0 273 08517 4 Lehrer Gustav I Taylor Donald E 2009 Unitary reflection groups Australian Mathematical Society Lecture Series vol 20 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 74989 3 MR 2542964 Shephard G C Todd J A 1954 Finite unitary reflection groups Canadian Journal of Mathematics Canadian Mathematical Society 6 274 304 doi 10 4153 CJM 1954 028 3 ISSN 0008 414X MR 0059914 S2CID 3342221 Coxeter Finite Groups Generated by Unitary Reflections 1966 4 The Graphical Notation Table of n dimensional groups generated by n Unitary Reflections pp 422 423External links editMAGMA Computational Algebra System page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Complex reflection group amp oldid 1194795840, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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